Optional. Removes duplicates from the result set. Learn more about DISTINCT clause

DISTINCT ON

Optional. Removes duplicates based on the distinct_expressions. Learn more about the DISTINCT ON clause.

expressions

The columns or calculations that you wish to retrieve.

tables

The tables that you wish to retrieve records from. There must be at least one table listed in the FROM clause.

WHERE conditions

Optional. The conditions that must be met for the records to be selected.

GROUP BY expressions

Optional. It collects data across multiple records and groups the results by one or more columns.

HAVING condtion

Optional. It is used in combination with the GROUP BY to restrict the groups of returned rows to only those whose the condition is TRUE.

ORDER BY expression

Optional. It is used to sort the records in your result set.

LIMIT

Optional. If LIMIT is provided, it controls the maximum number of records to retrieve. At most, the number of records specified by number_rows will be returned in the result set. The first row returned by LIMIT will be determined by offset_value.

FETCH

Optional. If FETCH is provided, it controls the maximum number of records to retrieve. At most, the number of records specified by fetch_rows will be returned in the result set. The first row returned by FETCH will be determined by offset_value.

FOR UPDATE

Optional. Records affected by the query are write-locked until the transaction has completed

FOR SHARE

Optional. Records affected by the query can be used by other transactions but can not be updated or deleted by those other transactions

Example - Select all fields from one table

Let's look at how to use a PostgreSQL SELECT query to select all fields from a table.

SELECT *

FROM categories

WHERE category_id >= 2500

ORDER BY category_id ASC;

In this PostgreSQL SELECT statement example, we've used * to signify that we wish to select all fields from the categories table where the category_id is greater than or equal to 2500. The result set is sorted by category_id in ascending order.

Example - Select individual fields from one table

You can also use the PostgreSQL SELECT statement to select individual fields from the table, as opposed to all fields from the table.

For example:

SELECT category_id, category_name, comments

FROM categories

WHERE category_name = 'Hardware'

ORDER BY category_name ASC, comments DESC;

This PostgreSQL SELECT example would return only the category_id, category_name, and comments fields from the categories table where the category_name is 'Hardware'. The results are sorted by category_name in ascending order and then comments in descending order.

Example - Select fields from multiple tables

You can also use the PostgreSQL SELECT statement to retrieve fields from multiple tables.

SELECT products.product_name, categories.category_name

FROM categories

INNER JOIN products

ON categories.category_id = products.category_id

ORDER BY product_name;

This PostgreSQL SELECT example joins two tables together to gives us a result set that displays the product_name and category_name fields where the category_id value matches in both the categories and products table. The results are sorted by product_name in ascending order.